At some point this year there will be a General Election. And when the election is called, there will be plenty of debate about who the best candidates to vote for are - with tactical voting discussions set to be high on the agenda.

There are several websites who are dedicated to figuring out the best way for people to vote tactically in order to ensure that Conservative candidates - predominantly - aren't elected into Parliament.

But not everyone is a fan of such methods. One person, writing into our sister print title the Mid Devon Gazette, says that in many constituencies, to vote in elections involves basing your choice on your beliefs and assumptions about who is likely to get more votes, and trying to second guess what other voters will do.

They added that the result is that many people reluctantly don’t vote with their conscience, and ‘lend’ their vote to another candidate whom they wouldn’t vote for if they felt they had a choice. - saying this isn’t democracy, this is madness.

Read the full letter below:

For the sake of our country and for all of us who live here, I believe we need to reverse the legacy of successive Tory governments whose political choices have led to a disintegration of essential services and infrastructure, a carbon footprint which is far greater than it could and should be by now and a dramatic increase in financial inequality which leads to poorer health, more crime, more social conflict and less happiness throughout a population than there is in countries where the gap between rich and poor is small, even when the country overall is not rich like ours.

In this year when it appears that about 50% of the nations in the world are going to the polls, it seems a good time to reflect and compare our own voting system with those of others. Clearly we are better off than some, in that we have a universal right to vote provided we are over 18, and it is illegal to intimidate people at a polling station, but our antiquated FPTP system is no longer fit for purpose and contributes to some people’s feeling that there is no point in voting.

So I believe we need to move forward to a system of proportional representation, in line with the majority of other western democracies who have used this system for years.

A Labour Party member and friend of mine summed up Labour’s plan of action if it forms our next government: to invest in people, in society, in the environment.

I have no disagreement with this principle – but there is another political party which also has a vision of what a better UK would look like and how we might achieve that, and not only in my view does it encompass all of the above, but makes a direct point about the need to understand the interconnectedness of social policy with environmental policy, and the sort of economic policies which would enable a government to invest in those things and – equally as important – to implement the policies in a way that will work.

That party is the Green Party, whose policies have extensive – and growing – support throughout the UK.

Over the past 10 years we have had a shining example in Caroline Lucas of what a Green Party MP can look like, and the contribution they can make to parliamentary debate.

But the Green Party, like other relatively low-profile and less well-funded parties, has difficulty getting MPs elected in our current system.

At election time we are often urged by constituency political groups which believe they have a fair chance of getting their candidate elected, not to ‘split the vote’ and to vote for them, even though our allegiance and conscience may lay elsewhere.

Many of us have done it and we all understand this is one way that voters can and do try to work the FTPT system to achieve a ‘less bad’ outcome. We call it tactical voting, and I have no doubt that in the coming weeks/months we will hear a lot about this.

In many constituencies, to vote in our elections involves basing your choice on your beliefs and assumptions about who is likely to get more votes, and trying to second guess what other voters will do.

The result is that many people (and I’ve done it myself) reluctantly don’t vote with their conscience, and ‘lend’ their vote to another candidate whom they wouldn’t vote for if they felt they had a choice. This isn’t democracy, this is madness.

So my own personal call to my fellow voters is, regardless of what compromise you currently feel forced to make, or even if at the moment your decision is that you will vote with your conscience, find out what your chosen prospective candidate’s views are about our voting system, and whether this person, if elected, will commit to campaigning for electoral reform.

I urge my fellow voters to take this into account when deciding where to put their cross on the ballot paper. It is one of the things that will define our future.

Penny King

Lapford